An Introduction to Text Mining. Gabe Ignatow

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      An Introduction to Text Mining

      Research Design, Data Collection, and Analysis

       Gabe Ignatow

       University of North Texas

       Rada Mihalcea

       University of Michigan

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      Copyright © 2018 by SAGE Publications, Inc.

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

      Printed in the United States of America

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Ignatow, Gabe, author. | Mihalcea, Rada, 1974- author.

      Title: An introduction to text mining : research design, data collection, and analysis / Gabe Ignatow, University of North Texas, Rada Mihalcea, University of Michigan.

      Description: Thousand Oaks : SAGE Publications, [2018] | Includes bibliographical references and index.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2017038203 | ISBN 9781506337005 (pbk. : alk. paper)

      Subjects: LCSH: Data mining. | Social sciences—Research.

      Classification: LCC QA76.9.D343 I425 2017 | DDC 006.3/12—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017038203

      This book is printed on acid-free paper.

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      Acknowledgments

      An Introduction to Text Mining has been a long time in the making, and there are too many people to count who deserve our thanks for helping to bring this book to publication. First and foremost, we must thank our undergraduate and graduate students who have shown so much enthusiasm for learning about online communities. It was their energy and questions that convinced us of the need for this book. Helen Salmon, Katie Ancheta, and the entire editorial and production staff at SAGE deserve our special thanks. In truth, it was Helen who got this project off the ground, and she and the entire SAGE staff, including SAGE’s team of expert reviewers, provided support and guidance throughout the writing and production process. SAGE’s reviewers played an especially critical role by providing invaluable feedback based on their research and teaching experiences in their home disciplines. A textbook as interdisciplinary as this one requires absolutely top-flight reviewers, and we were fortunate to have many of them. A special thank-you goes to Roger Clark, Kate de Medeiros, Carol Ann MacGregor, Kenneth C. C. Yang, A. Victor Ferreros, and Jennifer Bachner.

      Last but by no means least we thank our spouses and children Neva, Alex, and Sara, and Mihai, Zara, and Caius, for their patience with us and their encouragement over the many years of research, writing, and editing that went into this textbook.

      GI and RM

      Preface

      Students are accustomed to participating in all sorts of online communities. While interacting on platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, and Instagram as well as on blogs, forums, and many other apps and sites, some students taking courses in the social sciences and computer science want to take things a step further and perform their own research on the social interactions that occur in these communities. We have written this book for those students, including especially undergraduate and graduate students in anthropology, communications, computer science, education, linguistics, marketing, political science, psychology, and sociology courses who want to do research using online tools and data sets. Whether they are writing a term paper or honors thesis, or working on an independent research project or a project with a faculty adviser, students who want to use text mining tools for social research need a place to start.

      Online communities offer no end of interesting linguistic and social material to study, from emojis and abbreviations to forms of address, themes, metaphors, and all sorts of interpersonal conversational dynamics. The volume of data available for research, and the many research tools available to students, are simply overwhelming. An Introduction to Text Mining is here to help. The book is organized to guide students through major ethical, philosophical, and logical issues that should be considered in the earliest stages of a research project (see Part I) and then to survey the landscape of text mining and text analysis tools and methodologies that have been developed across the social sciences and computational linguistics. Appendices A through G on data and software resources are a key to the book, and readers should consider reviewing

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